When Saddam Hussein was in power, he banned the Arbaeen Pilgrimage in Iraq. In doing so, many pilgrims were killed or imprisoned for a minimum of two years. Local Iraqis living on this route offered shelter to Shia Muslims and allowed them free passage during the night. They would mark their homes to signal they were safe and cook all through the night. These children are from a large family who housed Shia Muslims during the days of Saddam Hussein.

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The Sun bear is the smallest bear in the world. Sun bears depend on forests and the large scale deforestation that has occurred throughout Southeast Asia over the past three decades has dramatically reduced their tropical habitat. In addition to this Sun bear numbers have been reduced by an uncontrollable exploitation for their bile. This bile is used in traditional Chinese medicine and has led to an insatiable demand for wild bears and their organs. A recent report found that 48% of Malaysia's traditional medicine shops were selling bear bile.

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An elderly gentleman walks back from lunch in Calcutta, India

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A young man washes with soap at dawn on Lake Malawi's waters edge in Malawi.

Khushboo is from the Musuhar caste, one of the most marginalised communities in India. The threat of child marriage and trafficking is critically high amongst these communities. Female empowerment organisations like Nari Gunjun provide support, safe houses and education for young girls. Khushboo now lives at Nari Gunjun's boarding school in Bihar and has won nationally in karate.

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Nightbus in Calcutta, India

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Trainee Buddhist monks play in the grounds of their monastery in Ranong Province, the least populated region in Thailand.

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Inside a school classroom in Yayu Wildforest, Ethiopia

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Men watch a vintage car race at Goodwood Revival in England.

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Palm tree electrical pylon in Casablanca, Morocco

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Pine forest in Ghum, West Bengal

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A biker outside the famous Bagel store on Brick Lane, London

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An Iranian teenage boy on hunger strike in the Calais Jungle. A total of 12 men stitched their mouths and remained on hunger strike for 25 days.

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An Afghan man in the Calais Jungle, 2016

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A young boy rests in a fishing net hammock in Sandakan, Borneo.

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Goodwood Revival in England, UK

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My mother in Paros, Greece

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Olivia Squire in Kota Kinabalu, Borneo

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CJ during a fundraiser for St Giles Trust, a charity that support ex-offenders in the UK.

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A mahout’s daughter with vitiligo stands beside her family's elephant in Jaipur, India

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An abandoned car in Western Sahara, a disputed territory bordering Morocco

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Rush hour in Mumbai, India

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Taxi drivers in Mumbai, India

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Three sisters feed seagulls in Mumbai, India

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Night bus in London, UK

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A coffee worker lies on a bed of coffee cherries in Yayu Wildforest in Ethiopia

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A young man flees the south Calais Jungle during its closure in February 2016.

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Women queue at the entrance to Zeynab's Hill in Karbala, Iraq.

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Liverpool Street walkway in London, UK

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Louis on the train to London, UK

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Alan in San Gimignano, Italy

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Children play on the beach of Lake Malawi, Malawi.

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A woman jostles through the crowd to view a Porsche engine at Goodwood Revival in England.

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Within moments of being granted access to Iman Ali's Shrine in Iraq I saw an elderly woman sitting in her wheelchair. As most people were seated on the floor lying on blankets, she was instantly noticeable. She had come from Afghanistan with her brother, who stands behind her in the photograph and it was their first Arbaeen. Their journey to Karbala will be an unusually long one for them, requiring an immense amount of effort. The brother explained that once he is tired and weak from pushing her in the wheelchair, she will push him.

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An Asian elephant stands visibly traumatised, chained to a temple pillar following a six-hour procession. It was paraded through the streets of Varanasi, noisy with crowds and rocketing fireworks, in the build up to Diwali, the festival of lights. The elephant was swaying and its bloodshot eyes swirled, as its owner looked on anxiously. There are an estimated 3,600 domesticated Asian elephants in India, belonging either to the government, wealthy families or temples and used in festivals throughout the year. They are an endangered species, their wild counterparts under threat from habitat loss and conflict with humans in agricultural areas.

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Adrian at home in Highgate, London

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A young mother poses in a local restaurant on the outskirts of Pushkar, Rajasthan

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My grandmother in Jersey, Channel Islands

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A woman working at a paper recycling plant in Kolkata, a city recently celebrated for its waste management schemes which deserve to be implemented around the rest of India

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Mirror shop in Udaipur, India

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Beach walkers in Koh Phangan, Thailand

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Local children prepare tea known as ‘chai abu Ali’ to serve pilgrims in Najaf, Iraq during the late hours of the night before pilgrims find shelter. The boys took turns to stoke the fires, regularly switching teapots and all the while calling out to the crowd "Chai! Chai!” [Tea! Tea!]

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My father in Surrey, UK

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Serpentine in London, UK

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Jamie in Surrey, UK

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Full Moon Party in Koh Phangan, Thailand

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Turbine Hall inside the Tate Modern in London, UK

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A tourist wearing a coat made of Snow Leopard, a critically endangered species, in Tromsø, Norway